An ES&T special report
Pollution=free power for the automobile editorial staffers Marty Malin and Carol Lewicke look at the progress made in controlling auto emissions and the prospects for improvement in the future
ES&T
1hey say the neon lights are bright on Broadway but sometimes it’s pretty hard to tell because you can just barely make them out through the soupy air that chokes midtown Manhattan. In Manhattan, as in major metropolitan areas across the nation, the automobile is without peer as a source of air pollutants. The experts don’t always agree on precisely how much the automobile contaminates the air, but the estimates generally converge around 60 wt of all air pollutants-including those from incinerators, space heaters, power plants and other industrial sources-released to the air each year, So the fastest way to cut air pollution is t o eliminate automobiles. And the fastest way to cut your income tax is to stop working. As a symbol of the American Way, nothing-not even Motherhood-can match the allure of the private automobile. Nobody we know of has any good statistics, but we have the distinctly uneasy feeling that there are more two-car families in America than there are two-child families. While the national birth rate would seem to be leveling off, the number of cars on the streets grows apace. Those two observations have recently led someone more prescient than we to predict that by 1985, one out of every four cars on the New Jersey Turnpike will be driverless. Since, by most accounts at least, there won’t be any fewer cars on the road in the years to come, the need to make cars that pollute less is all the more compelling. 512 Environmental Science & Technology
The search for a more nearly pollution-free power plant for the automobile-spurred by emission limits prescribed by federal law for the 197576 model years-has picked up considerable momentum. If the activity at times seems to border on the frenetic, it’s because Detroit is feeling the pressures of eroding lead time and feeling them intensely. Auto makers say the deadline for signing initial supply contracts and firming up production schedules for 1975 model year cars has already passed. And Detroit is both unanimous and vociferous in its opinion that the industry can’t possibly meet the so-called “Muskie numbers” for emission levels derived by EPA from the Clean Air Act. EPA talks tough
The Clean Air Act of 1970 as amended provides the basic legal incentive for cleaning up the internal combustion engine (ICE).The act calls for a 90% reduction of hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide levels-as measured on 1970 model year cars-for all 1975 model year cars. The same HC and CO standards apply to 1976 and later model year cars. The law also provides for a reduction of 90 % in emissions of oxides of nitrogen (NO,) as measured in 1971 model year cars. Translated into numbers published by EPA on the basis of emission measurements, the 1975 standards are 0.41 g/mile HC, 3.4 g/mile CO, and 3.0 g/mile NO,. For 1976 model year cars, NO, emissions must be reduced to the 90% figure of 0.4 g/mile.
(See “New blueprint emerges for air pollution control,” ES&T, February 1971,p 106.) The Clean Air Act allows manufacturers to apply for a one-year suspension of the standards and requires the EPA administrator to hold public hearings and issue a decision within 60 days from the date of request. The EPA administrator can grant a suspension if he determines that : the suspension is essential to the public interest or public health and welfare the company requesting the suspensions has made a “good faith effort” to meet the standards the company has established that emission controls are not available or have not been available long enough to allow compliance by the deadlines and a study by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) and other information available have not indicated that technology, processes, or other alternatives are available to meet the standards. The preconditions-all of which must be met-are undeniably tough, and EPA Administrator William D. Ruckelshaus has made it no secret that the agency intends to exact strict compliance. Carrot and stick
While EPA is apparently bent on vigorous application of the stick provided by the Clean Air Act, the agency seems equally willing to ply the carrot. Through the Federal Clean Car Incentive Program (FCCIP) EPA is funding
incentive contracts and awards to encourage production of low-emissions vehicles. FCCIP is a standard federal RBID contract program except for the fact that there’s no front money involved. It’s a three-phase, niultivehicle testing and evaluation program for demonstrating vehicles designed to meet the 1976 emissions standards. EPA evaluates vehicles in terms of emission characteristics, safety, performance, reliability, serviceability, fuel availability, noise levels, and maintenance costs. In Phase I of the program, would-be contractors receive a one dollar token payment from EPA. The contractor then develops a vehicle at his own expense and submits certified, independent laboratory tests covering several operating parameters. If the vehicle meets established specifications-which are considerably looser than the 1975-76 standards-EPA leases the vehicle for a three-month period and the agency runs its own tests. If EPA likes the prototype, the agency negotiates a contract for production and delivery of 10 additional vehicles. In the process, specifications are tightened considerably so that by the end of this second phase, the vehicle must meet the 1975-76 emission numbers. Phase I11 allows the government to purchase 100-500 vehicles for fleet demonstration programs. The incentive part of the program is this. Following the completion of Phase I, if EPA accepts the vehicle for Phase I1
testing, the agency will reimburse the manufacturer for his R&D costs. Moreover, the manufacturer retains patent rights (one of the strings usually attached to federal money is the stipulation that patent rights be assigned to the government). Thus, if the development proves to be successful, royalties from licensing agreements could sweeten the pot considerably. In addition, the government will buy production vehicles at premium prices-up to twice the statutory price limit set by GSA on vehicles-after FCCIP is wound up. By edict of the EPA administrator, FCCIP is restricted to three general types of power sources-gas turbines, steam engines, and stratified charge engines. The idea is not to duplicate researchsuch as that on catalysts-which is being done by the auto industry. Current participants in FCCIP are Austin Tool Co., Chemico, International Materials, Petro Electric, Paxve, Schwitzer, and Stone Industrial. C l e a n i n g u p t h e ICE
The auto industry, of course, has been doing a lot of research itself, most of it aimed at patching up the ICE. By some standards, they’ve been remarkably successful-the ICE isn’t nearly as dirty as it once was. Emissions from autos are decreasing at an increasing rate, according to S. L,.Terry, vice-president for safety and environmental relations at Chrysler Corp. Carbon monoxide emissions from today’s cars are about of those from cars made in the 19303, according to Terry. “If the industry
While Detroit is saying that t h e 1975-76 emission numbers are too tough for present technology, two environmental groups, the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and Center for Scientists in the Public Interest (CSPI) are sueing EPA Administrator William D. Ruckelshaus for not being tough enough. NRDC and CSPI charge that Ruckelshaus “acted in excess of his authority” by promulgating standards that are less stringent than those mandated by the Clean Air Act. The groups say the standards for hydrocarbons are about four times as high as originally intended by Congress. The discrepancy comes about over the use of correlation factors to equate results of the 1970, 1972, and 1975 Federal Test Procedures (FTP). Citing the legislative history of t h e act, the plaintiffs say original air quality goals proposed by NAPCA were designed to cut pollutants t o levels compatible with the public health. The 1980 goal for hydrocarbons was about 0.25 g / m i l e , the devel determined by NAPCA t o be necessary for achieving satisfactory air quality. Plaintiffs allege, and defendant Ruckelshaus agrees, that the intent of the Clean Air Act was t o move the 1980 goals u p by five years to 1975.But there is wide disparity over whose conversion factors should be used. EPA says that in terms of the
stopped doing anything,” Terry maintains, “emissions would continue to decrease” as new cars replace old ones. To a large extent, just tinkering with the plumbing and wiring of the conventional ICE has aided in cutting emissions significantly. In addition, adapting engines for use with alternative fuelspropane, methane, liquefied natural gas (LNG) and even liquid hydrogenhas received considerable attention. Using alternative fuel systems, either separately or in tandem with conventional gasoline burning engines, does not appear to be feasible at this time. Most of the proposed alternative fuels are already in short supply and it is doubtful whether any fuel other than gasoline could be made available in sufficient quantities by 1975. The petroleum industry has already reallocated significant portions of its refining capacity at not insignificant cost to meet the anticipated need for lead-free fuels. R e c i r c u l a t i n g exhaust
One method that shows promise for reducing NO, is exhaust gas recirculation (EGR). Returning 10-20x of the exhaust to the intake manifold cuts thermal formation of NO, by reducing cylinder temperatures. But there is a penalty for cleaner operation. Precise control of the amount of gas recirculated is critical, and only small errors can lead to stalls and poor engine performance. Usually, carburetion ratios have to be enriched with fuel to assure smoother performance. That results in a fuel penalty ranging anywhere from 5-20
currently used 1975 FTP, the 0.25 g l m i l e standard is equivalent to 0.41 g l m i l e . The plaintiffs do the arithmetic differently and come u p with a standard of 0.11 glmili?. I n the first place, plaintiffs say, NAPCH itself rejected correlation factors as illogical, because 1975 vehicles would have completely different emission control systems than 1970 vehicles, and the relationship between the :I970 FTP and the 1972 F‘TP established by 19701 vehicles would have no application to 1975 vehicles. Furthermore, leven if correlation factors were admissible, EPA’s use of I1970 vehicles rather than precontrolled 1968 vehicles to set standards is erroneous, plaintiffs contend, because 11970 vehicles had been gimmicked t o beat the 1970 tests-a practice referred to in the industry as cyclt? beating, Good results on 1970 tests did not necessarily mean better emission control s h e diluting pollutants’ by increasing exhaust volume fooled the machines. The effect was t o incorporate a degree of successful cheating into the 1975 standards, Such policies, charges Louis V. Lombardo, an ex-EPA employee who served as a consultant t o CSPI, “is analogous t o a jud,ge first finding a tax evader guilty of taking an illegal tax exemption in 1970 and’ then declalring that the evader could take the same illegal tax exemption every year thereafter.”
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EPA’s tough stance may not be as tough as it appears to be since the decision leaves Detroit plenty of room to maneuver
EPA Administrator William D. Ruckelshaus made what he called “the most important decision EPA has faced to date” last month when he denied requests of five automobile manufacturers-Volvo, International Harvester, Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler-for a one-year suspension of the 1975 emission standards for hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide. And his decision surprised practically everyone. At a press conference May 12, Ruckelshaus told reporters that he had reached his decision-and informed the White House of it-10 days earlier, but had refrained from announcing it until a formal, written opinion could be prepared. Furthermore, EPA’S General Counsel John R. Quarles said the only advance warning the auto industry got was a phone call he made to each of the applicants 1 hour prior to the public announcement of the decision, which was delayed until late afternoon to avoid possible repercussions on the stock exchanges. All of that seemed to signal an end to the recently wellpublicized industry-Executive bedfellowship. Detroit issued tight-lipped “no comments” and auto manufacturers said only that they would “carefully study” the 40-page opinion handed down by the EPA administrator. The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC),one of several environmental groups which participated in the hearings, crowed that the decision served “notice on Detroit that its days of obstruction are over.” (Attorney David G. Hdwkins, Counsel for NRDCwhose suit against Ruckelshaus for allegedly failing to set sufficiently strict emission standards was dismissed May 5 by Federal Judge Gerhard Gesell-says that, in light of the adminstrator’s decision, NRDC has not yet decided whether to appeal the ruling.) EPA’S toughness with Detroit may be more apparent than real. Those who read into the administration’s decision a promise that.1975 model year cars will meet the emission numbers for hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide may well be disappointed. With his decision to deny suspension, Ruckelshaus placed himself squarely in the “strict constructionist” columnmuch to the chagrin of company counsels, environmental lobbies, and some newsmen who had openly bet on a suspension with simultaneous promulgation of more relaxed interim standards. The EPA administrator has said repeatedly that his decision would be based on the fact that the auto makers had not clearly demonstrated that presently available technology is inadequate to meet the standards. Ruckelshaus does not say that technology is available. He says only that it “probably” is. And since auto makers couldn’t prove that it isn’t, he was legally constrained to rule against their request. The second part of the four part test (see p 512)-the good faith issue-didn’t even enter into the decision, since the question of technical feasibility was unfavorably resolved.
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EPA’S decision left Detroit plenty of room for maneuvering. “I want to stress that the [technical feasibility] issue is a close one,” Ruckelshaus said, leaving the door wide open for reapplication for a waiver when the auto makers feel they can marshal additional facts to support their contention. And at least one of the five applicants-Chrysler Corp.-is rumored to he considering trying to overturn the ruling in the courts. Some hint of things t o come may be gleaned from the opinion itself. The language is not unnecessarily rough nor does one detect a punitive tone. There are few admonitions, and any questioning of industry practices is done without being abrasive. The document also spells out what the agency will be looking for in case the auto makers can persuade EPA that technology is not available and the question of good faith has to be probed. EPA itself clearly expects to reconsider its findings at a later date. Of course, purely political considerations appear to weigh heavily in whether or not Detroit will ever meet the Muskie numbers. National elections are only six months away. The present administration can ill afford to appear to be “soft on pollution” now. The fact that the White House has not commented on the hearings or EPA’S decision lends credence to the conjecture that the Nixon administration does not wish to make an issue of the environment in the 1972 campaign. By avoiding comment on the issue now, the administration may be freer to press for relaxed standards should it wish to d o so later. It’s also no secret that Detroit will lobby hardboth on Capitol Hill and within the Executive-for changes in the law.
EPA’s Ruckelshaus The issue is close
and generally increases emissions of hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide. Thermal reactors offer yet another partial solution for cleaning up exhaust. Such reactors usually take the form of greatly enlarged exhaust manifolds which provide a longer detention period for gases at elevated temperatures. The greater detention time allows more complete oxidation of carbon monoxide and unburned hydrocarbons to carbon dioxide and water. Thermal reactors have been designed which operate either on lean or rich fuel-air mixtures. But the high temperatures beneficial to C O and HC destruction only aggravate the problem of thermal NO, formation. Other engine modifications under intensive study by Detroit and some foreign auto makers are designed to offer more positive control over the combustion cycle. They include electronic fuel injection, quick heating intake manifolds, spark retard systems, new ignition systems which don’t depend on spark plugs, and cylinder head modifications. Catalysts
Despite encouraging results obtained by internal modifications of the gasoline engine, auto makers agree that their only hope of meeting the stringent 1975-76 standards rests with catalytic control devices. Catalyst makers group catalytic units by physical types (monolithic or pellet), chemical types (oxidation or reduction), and composition (base or noble metals). A catalytic device generally consists of an active ingredient-a catalyst-deposited on some sort of support matrix and sealed in a “can.” The catalytic device may then be positioned i n the exhaust stream a t the tailpipe (retrofitted) or incorporated into the exhaust manifold near the engine. Much of the knowledge about catalysts remains heavily shrouded in secrecy, unknown even to the auto manufacturers who routinely sign agreements with catalyst makers promising not to analyze catalysts even in the event that they fail. Catalyst support materials are usually proprietary ceramics or alumina formulations. The physical configuration of the support may be pellets or beads, honeycombs, rolled or stacked plates. The idea is to achieve a support which will not degrade, break down, or shrink appreciably with high exhaust temperatures or vibration, but which will provide maximum area for catalytic activity and resist sloughing of the catalytic formulation.
During catalytic reactor manufacture, the support-or carrier-is charged with catalytic formulations. Industry spokesmen are tight-lipped, but it is generally thought that liquid formulations are preferred to solids because of superior adhesion characteristics. The catalyst itself may be either a noble metal such as platinum or palladium, or a n exotic combination of base metals such as cobalt, copper, molybdenum, and certain rare earths. Oxidation catalysts, used to convert hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide and water must generally be supplied with auxiliary air to do their job well. It is this type of catalyst which shows most promise. Reduction catalysts which convert NO, into nitrogen gas or ammonia, depending on the technology, must operate in oxygen-poor environments. Reduction catalysts are not nearly as well developed as oxidation catalysts. Catalysts available to date have shown rather poor durability, although some manufacturers claim to have catalysts which will last up to 25,000 miles. As a rule of thumb, however, catalysts with good durability have shown relatively poor activity. The converse holds true as well. Catalysts which show the most promise for meeting the 1975-76 standards are usually seriously impaired after 5000 miles of driving. Lead, sulfur, and phosphorus seriously interfere with catalytic performance and to date no catalytic device available has been able t o stand up to the 50,000 mile maintenance free conditions required by EPA,no matter what the level of catalytic activity. Auto industry spokesmen also point out that tests on many of the longer lived catalysts have been carried out with essentially “sterile” fuel- fuel which contains about 100 times less lead than EPA will allow to be present in so-called lead-free fuel. Despite all those problems, however, Detroit still has high hopes for catalysts. Ford recently signed a contract with Engelhard Industries to provide catalysts for half of its 1975 model year cars and is angling for suppliers for the remaining half. Even with the catalysts-which Ford, like most other car manufacturers, will use in a highly integrated system with reactors, EGR,improved choke, throttle and ignition systems-the best Ford can do for 1975 is 1.6 g/mile HC, 19 g/ mile CO, and 2.0 g/mile NO, for 50,000 miles. GM says its integrated system could potentially achieve 0.3 gimile HC, 2.5 g/mile CO, and 2.0 g/mile NO, at
very low mileage, but that after 5000 miles the numbers will be above the standards. Stratified charge
One modification of the ICE which may hold promise for the far term, if not by 1975, is the stratified charge engineso termed because of the stratified airfuel charge to the cylinder. Fuel is injected with only part of the intake air a t the spark plug, the remainder of the intake air serving to reduce pollutant formation. Two major variations of the stratified charge engine are currently under development. One version, developed by Ford for the US. Army Tank-Automotive Command has given emission levels below the 1975 standards for low mileage. Called the PROCO (Programed Combustion) engine, it has recently been installed in test vehicles together with catalytic devices and EGR systems, Ford says, but the engine is prone to misfires, and durability of system components is low. A second variant on the stratified charge engine uses a divided cylinder. The initial air-fuel mixture is ignited in a precombustion chamber and the exploding gases are mixed with intake air in the second chamber. While the stratified charge engine is promising, it still appears to be a long way from the assembly line. Ford estimates that if development work on the engine could be completed by the end of December, 1974, the company could make “limited use” of the PROCO in 1979 model cars. Wankel
The ICE that has received the lion’s share of interest and publicity from the automobile industry is the Wankel. Among its major advantages are fewer parts, more power per chamber, and a smaller size. It should be cheaper to make than the conventional reciprocating piston ICE. But it has a serious flawit’s dirty. It emits more pollutants than reciprocating ICE’Sbut that may not be as bad as it sounds. Hydrocarbon emissions are as much as twice those from uncontrolled piston engines, but carbon monoxide emissions are not much worse. Furthermore, NO, emissions are 20-60z lower than for piston engines, depending on various design parameters, and cleaning up NO, is generally acknowledged to be a tougher job than controlling HC and CO. Since the Wankel need be only about the size of a piston engine to yield comparable horsepower, there is more room Volume 6, Number 6, June 1972 515
under the hood for pollution control equipment. The fundamental unit of the Wankel is a chamber shaped like an overweight figure eight. In the chamber is a rotorroughly triangular in shape-with seals on each of the three apexes. Power to the wheels is provided by a gear arrangement in the center of the rotor which turns a shaft. The rotor divides the chamber into intake, combustion, and exhaust zones, The air-fuel mixture entering from the intake port is compressed in the combustion zone where it is ignited by a single spark plug. The explosion forces the rotor to spin, ejecting combustion products from the exhaust port, and the process is repeated. Unlike most of the other power plants of novel design, you can buy the Wankel today. Japan’s Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd., ships some 2000 Wankel-powered Mazdas to the U.S. each month, mostly for sale in California. The major technical problem with the Wankel to date-apart from its heavy emissions-has been failure of the apex seals. That problem seems to have been solved, however. Laboratory prototypes have reportedly been made with seals that last more than 100,000 miles, and Mazda seals are guaranteed for 30,000 miles although Toyo Kogyo says they will last much longer. Among American manufacturers, GM is in the best position to exploit the Wankel should it ever decide to do so. But periodic rumors from Detroit that
GM will put Wankels into production in the near future are quickly scotched, Late last year, GM signed a nonexclusive licensing agreement with AudiNSU; Wankel, GmbH; and CurtissWright. The contract called for an initial payment of $5 million at the end of 1971 and $10 million payments at the end of each year for the next four years with a final $5 million payment at the end of the fifth year. For this outlay, GM has the right to make and sell the Wankel worldwide. GM can end its obligation at the end of any year. Shortly after GM’S decision to test drive the Wankel, Ford acquired the right to make the engine in West Germany through its subsidiary FordWerke, A.G. Both Chrysler and American Motors are quietly evaluating the Wankel although neither has a license to manufacture or sell the rotary power plant.
Alternatives t o the ICE
As the’ lead times for the 1975-76 model years steadily diminish, it looks like the cleaned up ICE will be the only power plant on Detroit’s assembly line for the near term. But there are several other less developed power plants which could find a place in the transportation market within the next two decades, One of the more frequently mentioned is the electric car. Although the electricpowered vehicle promises zero pollution from the tailpipe, critics point out that generating stations do pollute and that the power needed to recharge storage
batteries will not be easy to obtain. The problem with electric passenger vehicles to date has been largely one of finding battery systems with sufficient storage capacity per unit weight to allow reasonable ranges between recharge and still provide the roominess of today’s vehicles. Switching equipment and controls remain expensive, but it is reasonable to expect that mass production techniques and advances in technology could make the electric power plant competitive with the ICE, at least for some uses. Electric automobiles might be particularly useful under the “two-car strategy,” frequently mentioned by EPA,where they could be used for shortdistance commuting and driving around town. Diesels have also been frequently mentioned as alternative power sources, since they emit practically no carbon monoxide. Theoretically HC and NO, standards for 1975 could be met-but only theoretically, because to date there are no acceptable federal test procedures for reliably measuring pollutants applicable to the diesel. And meeting the 1976 NO, standards borders on the impossible. Using EGR and modified engine designs it might be possible to attain NO, levels of about 1.1 g/mile, says Rudolph Uhlenhaut, director, passenger car development, Daimler-Benz A.G. But since CO is not present in diesel exhaust, using a catalyst to reduce NO, further is not possible. Furthermore, the diesel emits far more particulate matter than the ICE. “The diesel is not a simple magic bullet solution to the emission control system,” Uhlenhaut says, adding bluntly, “It is not an alternative to the gasoline-powered engine.” Various other alternatives, including Sterling cycle engines-based on the alternate heating and cooling of an entrapped gas (typically hydrogen) which powers pistons-appear to be much further down the road. Among those frequently discussed but still in early development stages are cars powered by fuel cells or ammoniaburning engines, and hybrid vehicles, which use conventional power sources coupled with more experimental ones such as electric motors, flywheels, or cleaner fuels. Gas turbine
Recent advances in engineering, however, have put two strong contenders into serious competition with the ICEgas turbines and steam engines. The gas turbine has many inherent ad-
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vantages over the ICE. It has less than half as many parts and needs no cooling system. It needs no warmup and boasts vibrationless operation. It can burn a variety of fuels-kerosene, gasoline, or diesel fuel, to name a few. Emissions measured on an 80 hp gas turbine developed by Williams Research Corp., Walled Lake, Mich., are within the 1975 standards. Emissions measured under the unrevised federal test procedure are 0.34 g/mile HC, 4.5 g/mile CO, and 2.15 g/mile NO, (unrevised federal standards were 0.46 g/mile HC, 4.5 g/mile CO, and 3.0 g/mile NO,). Williams Research President Sam Williams expects to meet the more stringent 1976 NO, numbers as well. In the Williams turbine, intake air is drawn into a compressor, squeezed to four times atmospheric pressure, and preheated as it passes through the front half of rotating heat exchangers. From the heat exchangers, the heated air travels to the combustion chamber into which fuel is sprayed and burned, raising the temperature to 1700°F. Hot gases spin the compressor turbine and then the power turbine which provides power to the rear wheels. Exhaust passes through the heat exchangers where it is cooled, and beat is conserved to preheat intake air. Williams says his gas turbine could be ready for initial mass production as early as 1978. If auto companies decided by 1975 to go with the gas turbine, three years lead time would be a v a i l a b l e sufficient to train personnel, retool, and realign supplies, Williams says. The major auto makers, while not as optimistic as Williams, are, nevertheless, interested in turbines. GM, Ford, and
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Chrysler have ongoing turbine programs. If indeed there is to be an alternative power source for the auto in the next decade, it would seem that the turbine is a definite front-runner. Steam power
Right behind the turbine, however, is the steam engine. The reason it's behind doesn't seem to be as much a matter of technical feasibility as the fact that Detroit has more solid in-house grounding in gas turbines. And the auto makers are extremely reluctant to take a private inventor's claims on faith and limited testing. In principle, the steam car uses vapor from water or some other working fluid-typically fluorocarbons-to drive pistons or spin turbines. Several inventors have developed proprietary steam designs including William P.
Lear's vapor turbine which uses waterLearium 111-as a working fluid (Lear Motors Corp., Reno, Nev.), Edward Pritchard's reciprocating piston steam engine using water as a working fluid (Pritchard Steam Power Pty., Ltd., Melbourne, Australia) and Wallace L. Minto's hybrid piston-turbine engine which uses freon as a working fluid (Kinetics Corp., Sarasota, Fla.) Virtually all the faults of earlier steam cars such as the Doble, White, and Stanley, have been corrected. Because of monotube boiler designs which contain only small volumes of working fluids at a time, explosion hazards have been eliminated. Engineering has improved heat transfer surfaces, and conservation of fluid is no longer a problem. One advantage the steam engine has over the turbine is that it is inherently quieter. Like the turbine, it runs on cheap, readily available fuels. Emission characteristics also look good. Tests on Pritchard's car, for example, showed no measurable HC, 0.47 simile CO, and about 0.6 g/mile NO,. With further efforts at controlling NO,, Pritchard's engine should meet or better the 1976 NO, standards. Lear's steam turbine -a 220 hp diesel bus engine-emits 2.0 gjmile CO, 0.1 g/mile HC, and 0.35 gjmile NO,-well within the 1975-76 limits. Minto says his engine emits less the pollutants allowed by than ''L/looth" law. Clearly the ICE faces some tough competition from the newcomers. Meeting the 1976 NO, standards-unless those standards are seriously eroded in the interim-will require some major breakthroughs in technology and that could cause Detroit to reconsider its commitment to the ICE.
Steam bus. Newsmen in Reno, Neu., queue up for ride in prototype